- About this Manual
- Chapter 1, Shelf and Backplane Hardware
- Chapter 2, Common Control Cards
- Chapter 3, Electrical Cards
- Chapter 4, Optical Cards
- Chapter 5, Ethernet Cards
- Chapter 6, DWDM Cards
- Chapter 7, Card Protection
- Chapter 8, Cisco Transport Controller
- Chapter 9, Security and Timing
- Chapter 10, Circuits and Tunnels
- Chapter 11, Sonet Topologies
- Chapter 12, DWDM Topologies
- Chapter 13, IP Networking
- Chapter 14, Alarm Monitoring and Management
- Chapter 15, Performance Monitoring
- Chapter 16, Ethernet Operation
- Chapter 17, SNMP
- Appendix A, Regulatory and Compliance Requirements
- 16.1 G-Series Application
- 16.2 G-Series Gigabit Ethernet Transponder Mode
- 16.3 E-Series Application
- 16.4 G-Series Circuit Configurations
- 16.5 E-Series Circuit Configurations
- 16.5.1 E-Series Circuit Protection
- 16.5.2 Port-mapped Mode and Single-card EtherSwitch Circuit Scenarios
- 16.5.3 ONS 15454 E-Series and ONS 15327 EtherSwitch Circuit Combinations
- 16.5.4 E-Series Point-to-Point Ethernet Circuits
- 16.5.5 E-Series Shared Packet Ring Ethernet Circuits
- 16.5.6 E-Series Hub and Spoke Ethernet Circuit Provisioning
- 16.5.7 E-Series Ethernet Manual Cross-Connects
- 16.6 Remote Monitoring Specification Alarm Thresholds
Ethernet Operation
Note The terms "Unidirectional Path Switched Ring" and "UPSR" may appear in Cisco literature. These terms do not refer to using Cisco ONS 15xxx products in a unidirectional path switched ring configuration. Rather, these terms, as well as "Path Protected Mesh Network" and "PPMN," refer generally to Cisco's path protection feature, which may be used in any topological network configuration. Cisco does not recommend using its path protection feature in any particular topological network configuration.
The Cisco ONS 15454 integrates Ethernet into a SONET time-division multiplexing (TDM) platform. The ONS 15454 supports E-Series, G-Series, and ML-Series Ethernet cards. This chapter covers the operation of the E-Series and G-Series Ethernet cards.
For Ethernet card specifications, see Chapter 5, "Ethernet Cards."For information on the ML-Series cards, refer to the Cisco ONS 15454 ML-Series Multilayer Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide. For step-by-step Ethernet card circuit configuration procedures, refer to the "Create Circuits and VT Tunnels" chapter of the Cisco ONS 15454 Procedure Guide.
Chapter topics include:
•G-Series Circuit Configurations
•E-Series Circuit Configurations
•Remote Monitoring Specification Alarm Thresholds
16.1 G-Series Application
The G-Series cards (G1000-4/G1K-4) reliably transport Ethernet and IP data across a SONET backbone. The G-Series card maps up to four Gigabit Ethernet interfaces onto a SONET transport network and provides scalable and provisionable transport bandwidth at signal levels up to STS-48c per card. The G-Series card provides line rate forwarding for all Ethernet frames (unicast, multicast, and broadcast) and can be configured to support Jumbo frames (defined as a maximum of 10,000 bytes).The G-Series card incorporates features optimized for carrier-class applications such as:
•High Availability (HA), including hitless (< 50 ms) performance under software upgrades and all types of SONET/SDH equipment protection switches.
•Hitless reprovisioning.
•Support of Gigabit Ethernet traffic at full line rate.
•Full TL1-based provisioning capability. Refer to the Cisco ONS 15454 and Cisco ONS 15327 TL1 Command Guide for G-Series TL1 provisioning commands.
•Serviceability options including enhanced port states, terminal and facility loopback, and J1 path trace.
•SONET-style alarm support.
•Ethernet performance monitoring (PM) and remote monitoring (RMON) functions.
The G-Series card allows an Ethernet private line service to be provisioned and managed very much like a traditional SONET or SDH line. G-Series card applications include providing carrier-grade transparent LAN services (TLS), 100 Mbps Ethernet private line services (when combined with an external 100 Mb Ethernet switch with Gigabit uplinks), and high-availability transport for applications such as storage over MAN/WANs.
The card maps a single Ethernet port to a single STS circuit. You can independently map the four ports on the G-Series card to any combination of STS-1, STS-3c, STS-6c, STS-9c, STS-12c, STS-24c, and STS-48c circuit sizes, provided the sum of the circuit sizes that terminate on a card do not exceed STS-48c.
To support a Gigabit Ethernet port at full line rate, an STS circuit with a capacity greater or equal to 1 Gbps (bidirectional 2 Gbps) is needed. An STS-24c is the minimum circuit size that can support a Gigabit Ethernet port at full line rate. The G-Series card supports a maximum of two ports at full line rate.
The G-Series transmits and monitors the SONET J1 Path Trace byte in the same manner as ONS 15454 OC-N cards. For more information on the J1 Path Trace, refer to the "Path Trace" section.
Note G-Series encapsulation is standard HDLC framing over SONET/SDH as described in RFC 1622 and RFC 2615 with the PPP protocol field set to the value specified in RFC 1841.
16.1.1 G1K-4 and G1000-4 Comparison
The G1K-4 and the G1000-4 cards comprise the ONS 15454 G-Series and are hardware equivalents.
When installed in ONS 15454s running software prior to Software Release 4.0, both cards require the XC10G card to operate. However, when installed on an ONS 15454 running Software R4.0 and later, the G1K-4 card is not limited to installation in ONS 15454s with XC10G cards but can also be installed in ONS 15454s with XC and XCVT cards. When used with XC and XCVT cards on an ONS 15454 running Release 4.0 and later, the G1K-4 is limited to the high-speed slots (Slots 5, 6, 12, and 13.)
Software R4.0 and later identifies G1K-4 cards as G1K-4s upon physical installation. Software prior to R4.0 identifies both G1000-4 and G1K-4 cards as G1000-4s upon physical installation.
These constraints do not apply to a G-Series card configured for Gigabit Ethernet Transponder Mode, see "G-Series Gigabit Ethernet Transponder Mode" section.
16.1.2 G-Series Example
Figure 16-1 shows an example of a G-Series application. In this example, data traffic from the Gigabit Ethernet port of a high-end router travels across the ONS 15454 point-to-point circuit to the Gigabit Ethernet port of another high-end router.
Figure 16-1 Data Traffic On G-Series Point-To-Point Circuit
The G-Series card carries any layer three protocol that can be encapsulated and transported over Gigabit Ethernet, such as IP or IPX. The data is transmitted on the Gigabit Ethernet fiber into the standard Cisco Gigabit Interface Converter (GBIC) on a G-Series card. The G-Series card transparently maps Ethernet frames into the SONET payload by multiplexing the payload onto a SONET OC-N card. When the SONET payload reaches the destination node, the process is reversed and the data is transmitted from the standard Cisco GBIC in the destination G-Series card onto the Gigabit Ethernet fiber.
The G-Series card discards certain types of erroneous Ethernet frames rather than transport them over SONET. Erroneous Ethernet frames include corrupted frames with CRC errors and under-sized frames that do not conform to the minimum 64-byte length Ethernet standard. The G-Series card forwards valid frames unmodified over the SONET network. Information in the headers is not affected by the encapsulation and transport. For example, packets with formats that include IEEE 802.1Q information will travel through the process unaffected.
16.1.3 802.3z Flow Control and Frame Buffering
The G-Series supports IEEE 802.3z flow control and frame buffering to reduce data traffic congestion. To prevent over-subscription, 512 KB of buffer memory is available for the receive and transmit channels on each port. When the buffer memory on the Ethernet port nears capacity, the ONS 15454 uses IEEE 802.3z flow control to transmit a pause frame to the source at the opposite end of the Gigabit Ethernet connection.
The pause frame instructs the source to stop sending packets for a specific period of time. The sending station waits the requested time before sending more data. Figure 16-1 illustrates pause frames being sent and received by ONS 15454s and attached switches.
The G-Series card has symmetric flow control. It proposes symmetric flow control when auto-negotiating flow control with attached Ethernet devices. Symmetric flow control allows the G-Series to respond to pause frames sent from external devices and send pause frames to external devices. Prior to Software R4.0, flow control on the G-Series card was asymmetric, meaning the card sent pause frames and discarded received pause frames.
This flow-control mechanism matches the sending and receiving device throughput to that of the bandwidth of the STS circuit. For example, a router might transmit to the Gigabit Ethernet port on the G-Series. This particular data rate may occasionally exceed 622 Mbps, but the ONS 15454 circuit assigned to the G-Series port might be only STS-12c (622.08 Mbps). In this example, the ONS 15454 sends out a pause frame and requests that the router delay its transmission for a certain period of time. With flow control and a substantial per-port buffering capability, a private line service provisioned at less than full line rate capacity (STS-24c) is efficient because frame loss can be controlled to a large extent.
Release 4.1 introduces flow control threshold provisioning to the G-Series card, which allows a user to select one of three watermark (buffer size) settings: default, low latency, or custom. Default is the best setting for general use and was the only setting available prior to release 4.1. Low latency is good for sub-rate applications, such as VoIP over an STS-1. For attached devices with insufficient buffering, best effort traffic or long access line lengths, set the G-Series to a higher latency.
The custom setting allows you to specify an exact buffer size threshold for Flow Ctrl Lo and Flow Ctrl Hi. The flow control high setting is the watermark for sending the "Pause On" frame to the attached Ethernet device, this frame signals the device to temporarily stop transmitting. The flow control low setting is the watermark for sending the "Pause Off" frame, which signals the device to resume transmitting.
Note External Ethernet devices with auto-negotiation configured to interoperate with G-Series cards running releases prior to R4.0 do not need to change auto-negotiation settings when interoperating with G-Series cards running R4.0 and later.
Note With a G-Series card, you can only enable flow control on a port if auto-negotiation is enabled on the device attached to that port.
16.1.4 Ethernet Link Integrity Support
The G-Series supports end-to-end Ethernet link integrity (Figure 16-2). This capability is integral to providing an Ethernet private line service and correct operation of Layer 2 and Layer 3 protocols on the attached Ethernet devices. End-to-end Ethernet link integrity essentially means that if any part of the end-to-end path fails the entire path fails. Failure of the entire path is ensured by turning off the transmit lasers at each end of the path. The attached Ethernet devices recognize the disabled transmit laser as a loss of carrier and consequently an inactive link.
Figure 16-2 End-to-End Ethernet Link Integrity Support
Note Some network devices can be configured to ignore a loss of carrier condition. If a device configured to ignore a loss of carrier condition attaches to a G-Series card at one end, alternative techniques (such as use of Layer 2 or Layer 3 keep-alive messages) are required to route traffic around failures. The response time of such alternate techniques is typically much longer than techniques that use link state as indications of an error condition.
Note Enabling or disabling port-level flow control on the test set or other Ethernet device attached to the G-Series port can affect the transmit (Tx) laser and result in unidirectional traffic flow.
As shown in Figure 16-2, a failure at any point of the path causes the G-Series card at each end to disable its Tx transmit laser, which causes the devices at both ends to detect a link down. If one of the Ethernet ports is administratively disabled or set in loopback mode, the port is considered a "failure" for the purposes of end-to-end link integrity because the end-to-end Ethernet path is unavailable. The port "failure" also disables both ends of the path.
16.1.5 Gigabit EtherChannel/802.3ad Link Aggregation
The end-to-end Ethernet link integrity feature can be used in combination with Gigabit EtherChannel capability on attached devices. The combination provides an Ethernet traffic restoration scheme that has a faster response time than alternate techniques such as spanning tree rerouting, yet is more bandwidth efficient because spare bandwidth does not need to be reserved.
The G-Series supports all forms of link aggregation technologies including Gigabit EtherChannel (GEC), which is a Cisco proprietary standard, and the IEEE 802.3ad standard. The end-to-end link integrity feature of the G-Series allows a circuit to emulate an Ethernet link. This allows all flavors of Layer 2 and Layer 3 rerouting to work correctly with the G-Series. Figure 16-3 illustrates G-Series GEC support.
Figure 16-3 G-Series Gigabit EtherChannel (GEC) Support
Although the G-Series card does not actively run GEC, it supports the end-to-end GEC functionality of attached Ethernet devices. If two Ethernet devices running GEC connect through G-Series cards to an ONS 15454 network, the ONS 15454 SONET side network is transparent to the EtherChannel devices. The EtherChannel devices operate as if they are directly connected to each other. Any combination of G-Series parallel circuit sizes can be used to support GEC throughput.
GEC provides line-level active redundancy and protection (1:1) for attached Ethernet equipment. It can also bundle parallel G-Series data links together to provide more aggregated bandwidth. STP operates as if the bundled links are one link and permits GEC to utilize these multiple parallel paths. Without GEC, STP permits only a single non-blocked path. GEC can also provide G-Series card-level protection or redundancy because it can support a group of ports on different cards (or different nodes) so that if one port or card has a failure, traffic is rerouted over the other port or card.
16.2 G-Series Gigabit Ethernet Transponder Mode
Starting with Software Release 4.1, the G-Series card can be configured as a transponder. Transponder mode can be used with any G-Series supported GBIC (SX, LX, Zx, CWDM, or DWDM). Figure 16-4 shows a card level overview of a transponder mode application.
Figure 16-4 Card Level Overview of G-Series One-Port Transponder Mode Application
A G-Series card configured as a transponder operates quite differently than a G-Series card configured for SONET. In SONET configuration, the G-Series card receives and transmits Gigabit Ethernet traffic out the Ethernet ports and GBICs on the front of the card. This Ethernet traffic is multiplexed on and off the SONET network through the cross-connect card and the OC-N card (Figure 16-5). In transponding mode, the G-Series Ethernet traffic never comes into contact with the cross-connect card or the SONET network, but stays internal to the G-Series card and is routed back to a GBIC on that card (Figure 16-6).
Figure 16-5 G-Series in Default SONET Mode
Figure 16-6 G-Series Card in Transponder Mode (Two-Port Bidirectional)
A G-Series card can either be configured for transponding mode or as the SONET default. Once any port is provisioned in transponding mode, the card is in transponding mode and no SONET circuits can be configured until every port on the card goes back to SONET mode. Refer to the Cisco ONS 15454 Procedure Guide for detailed instructions on how to provision G-Series ports for transponder mode.
All SONET circuits must be deleted before a G-Series card can be configured in transponding mode. An ONS 15454 can host the card in any or all of the twelve traffic slots on the ONS 15454 and supports a maximum of 24 bidirectional or 48 unidirectional lambdas.
A G-Series card configured as a transponder can be in one of three modes:
•Two-port bidirectional transponding mode
•One-port bidirectional transponding mode
•Two-port unidirectional transponding mode
16.2.1 Two-Port Bidirectional Transponder
Two-port bidirectional transponder mode maps the transmitted and received Ethernet frames of one G-Series card port into the transmit and receive of another port (Figure 16-6). Transponder bidirectional port mapping can be any port to any port on the same card.
16.2.2 One-Port Bidirectional Transponder
One-port bidirectional transponder mode (Figure 16-7) maps the Ethernet frames received at a port out the transmitter of the same port. This mode is similar to two-port bidirectional transponder mode except that a port is mapped only to itself instead of to another port. Although the data path of the one-port bidirectional transponder mode is identical to that of a facility loopback. The transponding mode is not a maintenance mode and does not suppress non-SONET alarms, like loss of carrier (CARLOSS).
This mode can be used for intermediate DWDM signal regeneration and to take advantage of the wide band capability of the CWDM and DWDM GBICs, which allows you to receive on multiple wavelengths but transmit on a fixed wavelength.
Figure 16-7 One-Port Bidirectional Transponding Mode
16.2.3 Two-Port Unidirectional Transponder
Ethernet frames received at one port's receiver will be transmitted out the transmitter of another port. This mode is similar to two-port bidirectional transponder mode except only one direction is used (Figure 16-8). One port has to be provisioned as unidirectional transmit only and the other port as unidirectional receive. The port configured as unidirectional transmit ignores any lack of signal on the receive port, so the receive port fiber does not need not be connected. The port configured as unidirectional receive does not turn on the transmit laser, and so the transmit port fiber does not need to be connected.
This mode can be used when only one direction needs to be transmitted over CWDM/DWDM, for example certain VoD applications.
Figure 16-8 Two-Port Unidirectional Transponder
16.2.4 G-Series Transponder Mode Characteristics
The operation of a G-Series card in transponder mode differs from a G-Series card in SONET mode in several ways:
•A G-Series card set to transponder mode will not show up in the CTC list of provisionable cards when the user is provisioning a SONET circuit.
•G-Series cards set to transponder mode do not require cross-connect cards (XC, XCVT or XC10G), but do require timing communications and control cards (TCC+/TCC2).
•G-Series ports configured as transponders do not respond to flow control pause frames and pass the pause frames transparently through the card. In SONET mode, ports can respond to pause frames and do not pass the pause frames through the card.
•There is no TL1 provisioning support for configuring transponding mode. However, transponding mode and port information can be retrieved in the results for the TL1 command RTRV-G1000.
•All SONET related alarms are suppressed when a card is set in transponding mode.
•There are no slot number or cross-connect restrictions for G1000-4 or G1K-4 cards in transponder mode.
•Facility and terminal loopbacks are not fully supported in unidirectional transponding mode, but are supported in both bidirectional transponding modes.
•Ethernet autonegotiation is not supported and cannot be provisioned in unidirectional transponding mode. Autonegotiation is supported in both bidirectional transponding modes.
• No end-to-end link integrity function is available in transponding mode.
Note In normal SONET mode the G-Series cards supports an end-to-end link integrity function. This function causes an Ethernet or SONET failure to disable and turn the transmitting laser off the corresponding mapped Ethernet port. In transponder mode, the loss of signal on an Ethernet port has no impact on the transmit signal of the corresponding mapped port.
The operation of a G-Series card in transponder mode is also similar to the operation of a G-Series card in SONET mode:
•G-Series Ethernet statistics are available for ports in both modes.
•Ethernet port level alarms and conditions are available for ports in both modes.
•Jumbo frame and non-jumbo frame operation is the same in both modes.
•Collection, reporting, and threshold crossing conditions for all existing counters and PM parameters are the same in both modes.
•SNMP and RMON support is the same in both modes.
16.3 E-Series Application
The ONS 15454 E-Series cards include the E100T-12/E100T-G and E1000-2/E1000-2-G. An ONS 15454 supports a maximum of ten E-Series cards, and you can insert Ethernet cards in any multipurpose slot.
The E100T-G is the functional equivalent of the E100T-12. The E1000-2 is the functional equivalent of the E1000-2-G. An ONS 15454 using XC10G cards requires the G versions of the E-Series Ethernet cards.
16.3.1 E-Series Modes
An E-Series card operates in one of three modes: multicard EtherSwitch group, single-card EtherSwitch, or port-mapped. E-Series cards in multicard EtherSwitch Group or single-card EtherSwitch mode support Layer 2 features, including virtual local area networks (VLANs), IEEE 802.1Q, STP, and IEEE 802.1D. Port-mapped mode configures the E-Series to operate as a straight mapper card and does not support these Layer 2 features. Within an ONS 15454 containing multiple E-Series cards, each E-Series card can operate in any of the three separate modes. At the Ethernet card view in CTC, click the Provisioning > Ether Card tabs to reveal the card modes.
Note Port-mapped mode eliminates issues inherent in other E-Series modes and detailed in the field notice, "E-Series Ethernet Line Card Packet Forwarding Limitations."
16.3.1.1 E-Series Multicard EtherSwitch Group
Multicard EtherSwitch Group provisions two or more Ethernet cards to act as a single Layer 2 switch. It supports one STS-6c circuits, two STS-3c circuits, or six STS-1 circuits. Each multicard switch may connect up to a total of STS-6c in SONET circuits. When provisioned as an add or drop node of a shared packet ring circuit, the effective bandwidth doubles, supporting STS-6c in each direction of the ring. Figure 16-9 illustrates a multicard EtherSwitch configuration.
Figure 16-9 Multicard EtherSwitch Configuration
16.3.1.2 E-Series Single-Card EtherSwitch
Single-card EtherSwitch allows each Ethernet card to remain a single switching entity within the ONS 15454 shelf. This option allows STS-12c worth of bandwidth between two Ethernet circuit endpoints. Figure 16-10 illustrates a single-card EtherSwitch configuration.
Figure 16-10 Single-card EtherSwitch Configuration
16.3.1.3 Port-Mapped (Linear Mapper)
Port-mapped mode, also referred to as linear mapper, configures the E-Series card to map a specific E-Series Ethernet port to one of the card's specific STS circuits. (See Figure 16-11.) Port-mapped mode ensures Layer one transport has low latency for unicast, multicast, and mixed traffic. Ethernet and Fast Ethernet on the E100T-G card operate at line-rate speed. Gigabit Ethernet transport is limited to a maximum of 600 Mbps because the E1000-2-G has a maximum bandwidth of STS-12c. Ethernet frame sizes up to 1522 bytes are also supported, which allows transport of IEEE 802.1Q tagged frames. The larger maximum frame size of Q-in-Q frames, IEEE 802.1Q in IEEE 802.1Q wrapped frames, are not supported.
Figure 16-11 E-Series Mapping Ethernet Ports to SONET STS Circuits
Port-mapped mode disables Layer 2 functions supported by the E-Series in single-card and multicard mode, including STP, VLANs, and MAC address learning. It significantly reduces the service-affecting time for cross-connect and TCC+/TCC2 card switches.
Port-mapped mode does not support VLANs in the same manner as multicard and single-card mode. The ports of E-Series cards in multicard and single-card mode can join specific VLANs. E-Series cards in port-mapped mode do not have this Layer 2 capability and only transparently transport external VLANs over the mapped connection between ports. An E-Series card in port-mapped mode does not inspect the tag of the transported VLAN, so a VLAN range of 1 through 4096 can be transported in port-mapped mode.
Port-mapped mode does not perform any inspection or validation of the Ethernet frame header. The Ethernet Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) is validated, and any frame with an invalid Ethernet CRC is discarded.
Port-mapped mode also allows the creation of STS circuits between any two E-Series cards, including the E100T-G, E1000-G, or the E10/100-4 (the ONS 15327 E-Series card). Port-mapped mode does not allow an E-Series cards to connect to the ML-Series or G-Series cards.
16.3.2 E-Series IEEE 802.3z Flow Control
The E100T-G in any mode and the E1000-G in port-mapped mode support IEEE 802.3z symmetrical flow control and propose symmetric flow control when auto-negotiating with attached Ethernet devices. For flow control to operate, both the E-Series port and the attached Ethernet device must be set to auto-negotiation (AUTO) mode. The attached Ethernet device may also need to have flow control enabled. The flow-control mechanism allows the E-Series to respond to pause frames sent from external devices and send pause frames to external devices.
Flow control matches the sending and receiving device throughput to that of the bandwidth of the STS circuit. For example, a router might transmit to the Gigabit Ethernet port on the E-Series in port mapped mode. The data rate transmitted by the router may occasionally exceed 622 Mbps, but the ONS 15454 circuit assigned to the E-Series port in port-mapped mode is a maximum of STS-12c (622.08 Mbps). In this scenario, the ONS 15454 sends out a pause frame and requests that the router delay its transmission for a certain period of time.
Note To enable flow control between an E-Series in port mapped mode and a SmartBits test set, manually set bit 5 of the MII register to 0 on the SmartBits test set. To enable flow control between an E-Series in port mapped mode and an Ixia test set, select Enable the flow control in the properties menu of the attached Ixia port.
16.3.3 E-Series VLAN Support
Users can provision up to 509 VLANs per network with the CTC software. Specific sets of ports define the broadcast domain for the ONS 15454. The definition of VLAN ports includes all Ethernet and packet-switched SONET port types. All VLAN IP address discovery, flooding, and forwarding is limited to these ports.
The ONS 15454 IEEE 802.1Q-based VLAN mechanism provides logical isolation of subscriber LAN traffic over a common SONET transport infrastructure. Each subscriber has an Ethernet port at each site, and each subscriber is assigned to a VLAN. Although the subscriber's VLAN data flows over shared circuits, the service appears to the subscriber as a private data transport.
Note Port-mapped mode does not support VLANs.
The number of VLANs used by circuits and the total number of VLANs available for use appears in CTC on the VLAN counter (Figure 16-12).
Figure 16-12 Edit Circuit Dialog Featuring Available VLANs
16.3.4 E-Series Q-Tagging (IEEE 802.1Q)
E-Series cards in single-card and multicard mode support IEEE 802.1Q. IEEE 802.1Q allows the same physical port to host multiple 802.1Q VLANs. Each 802.1Q VLAN represents a different logical network. E-Series cards in port-mapped mode transport IEEE 802.1Q tags (Q-tags), but do not remove or add these tags.
The ONS 15454 works with Ethernet devices that support IEEE 802.1Q and those that do not support IEEE 802.1Q. If a device attached to an ONS 15454 Ethernet port does not support IEEE 802.1Q, the ONS 15454 uses Q-tags internally only. The ONS 15454 associates these Q-tags with specific ports.
With Ethernet devices that do not support IEEE 802.1Q, the ONS 15454 takes non-tagged Ethernet frames that enter the ONS network and uses a Q-tag to assign the packet to the VLAN associated with the ONS network's ingress port. The receiving ONS node removes the Q-tag when the frame leaves the ONS network (to prevent older Ethernet equipment from incorrectly identifying the 8021.Q packet as an illegal frame). The ingress and egress ports on the ONS network must be set to Untag for the removal to occur. Untag is the default setting for ONS ports. Example 1 in Figure 16-13 illustrates Q-tag use only within an ONS network.
The ONS 15454 uses the Q-tag attached by the external Ethernet devices that support IEEE 802.1Q. Packets enter the ONS network with an existing Q-tag; the ONS 15454 uses this same Q-tag to forward the packet within the ONS network and leaves the Q-tag attached when the packet leaves the ONS network. The entry and egress ports on the ONS network must be set to Tagged for this process to occur. Example 2 in Figure 16-13 illustrates the handling of packets that both enter and exit the ONS network with a Q-tag.
For more information about setting ports to Tagged and Untag, refer to the Cisco ONS 15454 Procedure Guide.
Figure 16-13 Q-tag Moving Through VLAN
16.3.5 E-Series Priority Queuing (IEEE 802.1Q)
Networks without priority queuing handle all packets on a first-in-first-out basis. Priority queuing reduces the impact of network congestion by mapping Ethernet traffic to different priority levels. The ONS 15454 supports priority queuing. The ONS 15454 maps the eight priorities specified in IEEE 802.1Q to two queues, low priority and high priority (Table 16-1). Q-tags carry priority queuing information through the network. (See Figure 16-14.)
The ONS 15454 uses a "leaky bucket" algorithm to establish a weighted priority (not a strict priority). A weighted priority gives high-priority packets greater access to bandwidth, but does not totally preempt low-priority packets. During periods of network congestion, roughly 70 percent of bandwidth goes to the high-priority queue and the remaining 30 percent goes to the low-priority queue. A network that is too congested will drop packets.
Note IEEE 802.1Q was formerly IEEE 802.1P.
Note E-Series cards in port-mapped mode and G-Series cards do not support priority queing.
Note E-Series port-mapped mode does not support priority queing (IEEE 8021.Q).
|
|
|
---|---|---|
0,1,2,3 |
Low |
30% |
4,5,6,7 |
High |
70% |
Figure 16-14 Priority Queuing Process
16.3.6 E-Series Spanning Tree (IEEE 802.1D)
The ONS 15454 operates Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) according to IEEE 802.1D, when an Ethernet card is installed. The E-Series Card supports common STPs on a per circuit basis up to a total of eight STP instances. It does not support per-VLAN STP. In single-card mode, STP can be disabled or enabled on a per circuit basis during circuit creation. Disabling STP will preserve the number of available STP instances.
STP operates over all packet-switched ports including Ethernet and OC-N ports. On Ethernet ports, STP is enabled by default but may be disabled. A user can also disable or enable STP on a circuit-by-circuit basis on unstitched Ethernet cards in a point-to-point configuration. However, turning off STP protection on a circuit-by-circuit basis means that the ONS 15454 system is not protecting the Ethernet traffic on this circuit, and the Ethernet traffic must be protected by another mechanism in the Ethernet network. On OC-N interface ports, the ONS 15454 activates STP by default, and STP cannot be disabled.
The Ethernet card can enable STP on the Ethernet ports to create redundant paths to the attached Ethernet equipment. STP connects cards so that both equipment and facilities are protected against failure.
STP detects and eliminates network loops. When STP detects multiple paths between any two network hosts, STP blocks ports until only one path exists between any two network hosts (Figure 16-15). The single path eliminates possible bridge loops. This is crucial for shared packet rings, which naturally include a loop.
Figure 16-15 STP Blocked Path
To remove loops, STP defines a tree that spans all the switches in an extended network. STP forces certain redundant data paths into a standby (blocked) state. If one network segment in the STP becomes unreachable, the STP algorithm reconfigures the STP topology and reactivates the blocked path to reestablish the link. STP operation is transparent to end stations, which do not discriminate between connections to a single LAN segment or to a switched LAN with multiple segments. The ONS 15454 supports one STP instance per circuit and a maximum of eight STP instances per ONS 15454.
The Circuit window shows forwarding spans and blocked spans on the spanning tree map (Figure 16-16).
Figure 16-16 Spanning Tree Map on Circuit Window
Note Green represents forwarding spans and purple represents blocked (protect) spans. If you have a packet ring configuration, at least one span should be purple.
Note E-Series port-mapped mode does not support STP (IEEE 8021.D).
16.3.6.1 E-Series Multi-Instance Spanning Tree and VLANs
The ONS 15454 can operate multiple instances of STP to support VLANs in a looped topology. You can dedicate separate circuits across the SONET ring for different VLAN groups. Each circuit runs its own STP to maintain VLAN connectivity in a multiring environment.
16.3.6.2 Spanning Tree on a Circuit-by-Circuit Basis
You can also disable or enable STP on a circuit-by-circuit basis on single-card EtherSwitch E-Series cards in a point-to-point configuration. This feature allows customers to mix spanning tree protected circuits with unprotected circuits on the same card. It also allows two single-card EtherSwitch E-Series cards on the same node to form an intranode circuit.
16.3.6.3 E-Series Spanning Tree Parameters
Default STP parameters are appropriate for most situations (Table 16-2). Contact the Cisco Technical Assistance Center (Cisco TAC) before you change the default STP parameters. Contact information for Cisco TAC is listed in the Preface of this manual.
16.3.6.4 E-Series Spanning Tree Configuration
To view the spanning tree configuration, at the node view click the Provisioning > Etherbridge > Spanning Trees tabs (Table 16-3).
16.4 G-Series Circuit Configurations
This section explains G-Series point-to-point circuits and manual cross-connects. Ethernet manual cross-connects allow you to cross connect individual Ethernet circuits to an STS channel on the ONS 15454 optical interface and also to bridge non-ONS SONET network segments.
16.4.1 G-Series Point-to-Point Ethernet Circuits
G-Series cards support point-to-point circuit configurations (Figure 16-17). Provisionable circuit sizes are STS 1, STS 3c, STS 6c, STS 9c, STS 12c, STS 24c, and STS 48c. Each Ethernet port maps to a unique STS circuit of the G-Series card.
Figure 16-17 G-Series Point-to-Point Circuit
The G-Series supports any combination of up to four circuits from the list of valid circuit sizes; however, the circuit sizes can add up to no more than 48 STSs.
Due to hardware constraints, the card imposes an additional restriction on the combinations of circuits that can be dropped onto a G-Series card. These restrictions are transparently enforced by the ONS 15454, and you do not need to keep track of restricted circuit combinations.
When a single STS-24c terminates on a card, the remaining circuits on that card can be another single STS-24c or any combination of circuits of STS-12c size or less that add up to no more than 12 STSs (that is a total of 36 STSs on the card).
If STS-24c circuits are not being dropped on the card, the full 48 STSs bandwidth can be used with no restrictions (for example using either a single STS-48c or 4 STS-12c circuits).
Note The STS-24c restriction only applies when a single STS-24c circuit is dropped; therefore, you can easily minimize the impact of this restriction. Group the STS-24c circuits together on a card separate from circuits of other sizes. The grouped circuits can be dropped on other G-Series cards on the ONS 15454.
Note The G-Series uses STS cross-connects only. No VT level cross-connects are used.
16.4.2 G-Series Manual Cross-Connects
ONS 15454s require end-to-end CTC visibility between nodes for normal provisioning of Ethernet circuits. When other vendors' equipment sits between ONS 15454s, OSI/TARP-based equipment does not allow tunneling of the ONS 15454 TCP/IP-based DCC. To circumvent a lack of continuous DCC, the Ethernet circuit must be manually cross connected to an STS channel using the non-ONS network. Manual cross-connects allows an Ethernet circuit to run from ONS node to ONS node while utilizing the non-ONS network (Figure 16-18).
Note In this chapter, "cross-connect" and "circuit" have the following meanings: Cross-connect refers to the connections that occur within a single ONS 15454 to allow a circuit to enter and exit an ONS 15454. Circuit refers to the series of connections from a traffic source (where traffic enters the ONS 15454 network) to the drop or destination (where traffic exits an ONS 15454 network).
Figure 16-18 G-Series Manual Cross-connects
16.5 E-Series Circuit Configurations
Ethernet circuits can link ONS nodes through point-to-point (straight), shared packet ring, or hub and spoke configurations. Two nodes usually connect with a point-to-point configuration. More than two nodes usually connect with a shared packet ring configuration or a hub-and-spoke configuration. Ethernet manual cross-connects allow you to cross connect individual Ethernet circuits to an STS channel on the ONS 15454 optical interface and also to bridge non-ONS SONET network segments. For step-by-step procedures to configure E-Series circuits, see the "Create Circuits and VT Tunnels" chapter of the Cisco ONS 15454 Procedure Guide.
16.5.1 E-Series Circuit Protection
Different combinations of E-Series circuit configurations and SONET network topologies offer different levels of E-Series circuit protection. Table 16-4 details the available protection.
Note Before making Ethernet connections, choose an STS-1, STS-3c, STS-6c, or STS-12c circuit size.
Note To make an STS-12c Ethernet circuit, Ethernet cards must be configured in Single-card EtherSwitch or port-mapped mode. Multicard mode does not support STS-12c Ethernet circuits.
16.5.2 Port-mapped Mode and Single-card EtherSwitch Circuit Scenarios
Seven scenarios exist for provisioning circuits on an E-Series card in single-card EtherSwitch or port-mapped mode:
1. STS 12c
2. STS 6c + STS 6c
3. STS 6c + STS 3c + STS 3c
4. STS 6c + 6 STS-1s
5. STS 3c + STS 3c +STS 3c +STS 3c
6. STS 3c +STS 3c + 6 STS-1s
7. 12 STS-1s
Note When configuring scenarios 3 and 4, the STS 6c must be provisioned before the smaller STS circuits.
16.5.3 ONS 15454 E-Series and ONS 15327 EtherSwitch Circuit Combinations
Table 16-5 shows the Ethernet circuit combinations available in ONS 15454 E-Series cards and ONS 15327 E-Series cards.
16.5.4 E-Series Point-to-Point Ethernet Circuits
The ONS 15454 can set up a point-to-point (straight) Ethernet circuit as single-card, port-mapped, or multicard circuit. Multicard EtherSwitch limits bandwidth to STS-6c of bandwidth between two Ethernet circuit points, but allows adding nodes and cards and making a shared packet ring (Figure 16-19). Single-card EtherSwitch and port-mapped mode allows a full STS-12c of bandwidth between two Ethernet circuit endpoints (Figure 16-20).
Figure 16-19 Multicard EtherSwitch Point-to-point Circuit
Figure 16-20 Single-card EtherSwitch or Port-mapped Point-to-Point Circuit
Note A port-mapped point-to-point circuit does not contain a VLAN.
16.5.5 E-Series Shared Packet Ring Ethernet Circuits
A shared packet ring allows additional nodes, besides the source and destination nodes, access to an Ethernet STS circuit. The E-Series card ports on the additional nodes can share the circuit's VLAN and bandwidth. Figure 16-21 illustrates a shared packet ring. Your network architecture might differ from the example.
Figure 16-21 Shared Packet Ring Ethernet Circuit
16.5.6 E-Series Hub and Spoke Ethernet Circuit Provisioning
The hub and spoke configuration connects point-to-point circuits (the spokes) to an aggregation point (the hub). In many cases, the hub links to a high-speed connection and the spokes are Ethernet cards. Figure 16-22 illustrates a hub and spoke ring. Your network architecture may differ from the example.
Figure 16-22 Hub and Spoke Ethernet Circuit
16.5.7 E-Series Ethernet Manual Cross-Connects
ONS 15454s require end-to-end CTC visibility between nodes for normal provisioning of Ethernet circuits. When other vendors' equipment sits between ONS 15454s, OSI/TARP-based equipment does not allow tunneling of the ONS 15454 TCP/IP-based DCC. To circumvent this lack of continuous DCC, the Ethernet circuit must be manually cross connected to an STS channel using the non-ONS network. The manual cross-connect allows an Ethernet circuit to run from ONS node to ONS node utilizing the non-ONS network.
Note In this chapter, "cross-connect" and "circuit" have the following meanings: cross-connect refers to the connections that occur within a single ONS 15454 to allow a circuit to enter and exit an ONS 15454. Circuit refers to the series of connections from a traffic source (where traffic enters the ONS 15454 network) to the drop or destination (where traffic exits an ONS 15454 network).
16.6 Remote Monitoring Specification Alarm Thresholds
The ONS 15454 features remote monitoring (RMON) that allows network operators to monitor the health of the network with a network management system (NMS).
One of the ONS 15454's RMON MIBs is the Alarm group, which consists of the alarmTable. An NMS uses the alarmTable to find the alarm-causing thresholds for network performance. The thresholds apply to the current 15-minute interval and the current 24-hour interval. RMON monitors several variables, such as Ethernet collisions, and triggers an event when the variable crosses a threshold during that time interval. For example, if a threshold is set at 1000 collisions and 1001 collisions occur during the 15-minute interval, an event triggers. CTC allows you to provision these thresholds for Ethernet statistics.
Note Table 16-6 define the variables you can provision in CTC. For example, to set the collision threshold, choose etherStatsCollisions from the Variable menu.